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Effective Carbon Rates 2021
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Page 1: Highlights brochure: Effective Carbon Rates 2021...2021 employs three carbon price benchmarks: 1. EUR 30 per tonne of CO 2, a historic low-end price benchmark of carbon costs in the

Effective Carbon Rates 2021

Page 2: Highlights brochure: Effective Carbon Rates 2021...2021 employs three carbon price benchmarks: 1. EUR 30 per tonne of CO 2, a historic low-end price benchmark of carbon costs in the

Effective Carbon Rates 2021 is the most detailed and comprehensive account

of how 44 OECD and G20 countries – responsible for around 80% of global

carbon emissions – price carbon emissions from energy use. The effective carbon

rate is the sum of tradeable emission permit prices,

carbon taxes and fuel excise taxes, all of which result

in a price on carbon emissions (Figure 1). This brochure

summarises the main results of the report

Effective Carbon Rates 2021.

Introduction

2 . OECD EFFECTIVE CARBON RATES 2021

INTRODUCTION

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OECD EFFECTIVE CARBON RATES 2021 . 3

Another practical example concerns the European Union Emissions Trading System (EU ETS). From 2018 to 2019, permit prices in the EU ETS increased by EUR 8.90 per tonne of CO2, from about EUR 16 to EUR 25.3 At the same time, overall emissions in the EU ETS decreased by 8.9%,4 illustrating a significant short-term response of energy utilities covered by the EU ETS to higher permit prices.

Carbon pricing is a very effective decarbonisation policy. Carbon prices reduce emissions by making low- and zero-carbon energy more competitive compared to high-carbon alternatives, and by encouraging reduced use of carbon containing fuels. In addition, a strong commitment to carbon prices creates certainty for investors that it pays to invest in the use of available clean technologies and the development of new ones.

It is estimated that an increase in the effective carbon rate by EUR 1 per tonne of CO2 leads on average to a 0.73% reduction in emissions over time.1 This means that, for a country that starts with no carbon price at all, the introduction of a carbon tax of EUR 10 per tonne of CO2 on its entire energy base would be expected to reduce emissions by an estimated 7.3%.

Why price carbon emissions?

CARBON PRICING

One practical example is the carbon price support in the United Kingdom, which increased effective carbon rates in the electricity sector from EUR 7 per

tonne of CO2 to more than EUR 36 between 2012 and 2018. Emissions in the electricity sector in the country fell by 73% in the same period,2 suggesting a strong response of UK utilities to higher effective carbon rates.

73%

1. Sen, S., & Vollebergh, H. (2018). The effectiveness of taxing the carbon content of energy consumption. Journal of Environmental Economics and Management, 92, 74-99.

2. UK Department for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy (2020). Updated energy and emissions projections: 2018 - Projections of greenhouse gas emissions and energy demand from 2018 to 2035.

3. ICAP (2020). International Carbon Action Partnership (ICAP) – ETS Prices. Retrieved on 13 October 2020 from https://icapcarbonaction.com/en/ets-prices.

4. Marcu, A. et al. (2020). 2020 State of the EU ETS Report. ERCST, Wegener Center, Bloomberg NEF and Ecoact.

Figure 1: Components of effective carbon ratesEffective Carbon Rate (EUR/tCO2)

Source: Effective Carbon Rates 2021

Emission permit price

Carbon tax

Fuel excise tax

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4 . OECD EFFECTIVE CARBON RATES 2021

This means that, together, they reached 19% of the goal of pricing all emissions at EUR 60 or more per tonne of CO2; see the area shaded in light blue in Figure 2. The area shaded in dark blue shows the Carbon Pricing Gap60, i.e. the shortfall between the current Carbon Pricing Score and pricing all emissions at or greater than EUR 60 per tonne of CO2. In 2018, the Carbon Pricing Gap was 81%.

Stronger progress had been made towards the more moderate EUR 30 per tonne of CO2 benchmark, however, the Carbon Pricing Score (CPS30) was still just under a quarter (24%). Considering the more ambitious and forward-looking central carbon pricing benchmark of EUR 120 in 2030, the Carbon Pricing Score (CPS120) was only 13%, on average across the 44 countries in 2018.

The Carbon Pricing Score (CPS) measures the extent to which countries have attained the goal of pricing all energy related carbon emissions at certain benchmark values for carbon costs. The more progress that a country has made towards a specified benchmark value, the higher the CPS. For example, a CPS of 100% against a EUR 30 per tonne of CO2 benchmark means that the country (or the group of countries) prices all carbon emissions in its (their) territory from energy use at EUR 30 or more. A CPS of 0% means that the country does not impose a carbon price on any emissions at all. An intermediate CPS between 0% and 100% means that some emissions are priced, but that not all emissions are priced at or above the benchmark price. Similarly, a CPS of 100% against a EUR 60 per tonne of CO2 or EUR 120 CPS means that all emissions are priced at a level that equals or exceeds the benchmark of EUR 60 or EUR 120 per tonne CO2.

Measuring progress with carbon pricing

Aiming to limit global temperature increases to 1.5°C, as called for in the Paris Agreement, requires decarbonisation by about mid-century.5,6 Against this background, Effective Carbon Rates 2021 employs three carbon price benchmarks:

1. EUR 30 per tonne of CO2, a historic low-end price benchmark of carbon costs in the early and mid-2010s.7 A carbon price of EUR 30 in 2025 is also consistent with a slow decarbonisation scenario by 2060 according to Kaufman et al (2020).8

2. EUR 60 per tonne of CO2, a low-end 2030 and mid-range 2020 benchmark according to the High-Level Commission on Carbon Pricing.9 A carbon price of EUR 60 in 2030 is also consistent with a slow decarbonisation scenario by 2060 according to Kaufman et al (2020).

3. EUR 120 per tonne of CO2, a central estimate of the carbon price needed in 2030 to decarbonise by mid-century under the assumption that carbon pricing plays a major role in the overall decarbonisation effort (See Figure 2 , low complementary policies in Kaufman et al. (2020)). EUR 120 is also more in line with recent estimates of overall social carbon costs.

5. Rogelj, J. et al. (2018). Mitigation Pathways Compatible with 1.5°C in the Context of Sustainable Development. In V. Masson-Delmotte et al. (Eds.), Global Warming of 1.5°C. An IPCC Special Report on the impacts of global warming of 1.5°C. IPCC.

6. Rogelj, J. et al. (2015). Energy system transformations for limiting end-of-century warming to below 1.5 °C. Nature Climate Change, 5, 519-527.

7. Alberici, S. et al. (2014). Subsidies and Costs of EU Energy – Final Report and Annex 3. Ecofys.

8. Kaufman, N. et al. (2020). A near-term to net zero alternative to the social cost of carbon for setting carbon prices. Nature Climate Change.

9. High-Level Commission on Carbon Prices. (2017). Report of the High-Level Commission on Carbon Prices. World Bank, Washington, D.C.

BOX 1. CARBON PRICING BENCHMARKS

MEASURING PROGRESS

In 2018, the 44 OECD and G20 countries analysed, which are responsible for about 80% of energy related global CO2 emissions, had a Carbon Pricing Score of 19% at the EUR 60 benchmark (CPS60).

19%

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OECD EFFECTIVE CARBON RATES 2021 . 5

In the road sector, in 2018, the CPS60

was 80%, the CPS30

was 91%, while the CPS

120 stood at 58%. In the case of road

transport, it is important to acknowledge that there are other external costs of road usage (such as accidents, noise, local air pollution and congestion) in addition to the climate costs. Thus, there are good reasons for charging effective carbon rates that are substantially higher than low-end and mid-point estimates of climate costs in the road sector.

In the electricity sector, for all countries together, the CPS60

was 5%, the CPS

30 was 10% and the CPS

120 was 3% in 2018. However,

some countries achieved significantly higher carbon pricing scores in the electricity sector. Both Korea and Iceland reached a CPS

30 of 93%, and the United Kingdom scored 77% in 2018. All

three countries also attained a CPS60

of nearly 50%.

In 2018, in the industry sector the CPS60

was 5%, the CPS30

was 9%, and the CPS

120 was 3% for all the countries together.

Norway, Slovenia and Denmark reached a CPS60

of 40% and a CPS

30 of 50% or more.

In the residential and commercial sector, the CPS60

was 10% for all 44 countries together in 2018. The CPS

30 was 14% and the

CPS120

was 6%. Some countries achieved a significantly higher carbon pricing level in the residential and commercial sector. The Netherlands reached a CPS

60 of 89%, while Switzerland achieved

a CPS60

of 78% and Italy, France and Greece achieved a CPS60

of about 50%. Five countries achieved a CPS

30 of more than 70%

(the Netherlands, Iceland, Switzerland, Korea and Ireland).

BOX 2. THE STRENGTH OF CARBON PRICING VARIES ACROSS SECTORS

Table 1: Progress varies significantly across sectors, 2018

Sector  EUR 30 EUR 60 EUR 120

Agriculture & fisheries

43% 38% 23%

Electricity 10% 5% 3%

Industry 9% 5% 3%

Off-road transport 34% 25% 13%

Residential & commercial

14% 10% 6%

Road transport 91% 80% 58%

Source: Effective Carbon Rates 2021

Figure 2: The carbon pricing score, 2018

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

350

E�ec

tive

Carb

on R

ate

in E

UR

per t

onne

of C

O2

1000 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90

% of CO2 emissions from energy use

81%Carbon Pricing Gap

19%Carbon Pricing Score

(CPS)

Unpriced emissions0 to 55%

Priced emissions55 to 100%

Effective carbonrate (EUR/t CO2)

EUR 60/t CO2 benchmark rate

MEASURING PROGRESS

Source: Effective Carbon Rates 2021

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6 . OECD EFFECTIVE CARBON RATES 2021

Figure 3: Some countries attained high carbon pricing scores, 2018

A handful of carbon pricing leaders attained high carbon pricing scoresIn 2018, Switzerland, Luxembourg and Norway reached a CPS60 of close to 70%, as shown in Figure 3. In Switzerland, the high CPS60 is the result of fuel taxes in the road sector that are fully earmarked for road infrastructure purposes, a significant carbon incentive tax (CHF 96 or EUR 83 per tonne CO2 since 2018) for fossil fuel use in the residential and commercial sector, a highly decarbonised electricity supply and few industrial emissions, which are largely subject to the Swiss ETS. In Norway, this is the result of a highly decarbonised

electricity supply, significant taxes on fossil fuels used in the residential and commercial sector, as well as a large share of industrial sector emissions resulting from the offshore petroleum industry that is subject to both a carbon tax and the EU ETS. In Luxembourg, a small country with a significant share of daily commuters who live abroad, a high share of transit traffic and considerable fuel tourism, the high CPS60 is largely due to the road sector dominating overall energy use.

THE CARBON PRICING SCORE

1%2%

7%

9%

13%

13%

17%

24%

24%25

%28%29

%

30%

30%

30%32

%33%

34%

34%35

%

35%36

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36%37

%

41%44

%46%

46%

47%

47%48

%

49%50

%

50%51

%53%55

%57%

57%

68%69

%

69%

100%

90%

80%

70%

60%

50%

40%

30%

20%

10%

0%

100%

90%

80%

70%

60%

50%

40%

30%

20%

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0%

BRA

IDN

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CHN

IND

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CHL

22%

USAJP

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TUR

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ARG

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CZE

MEXLV

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SWE

NZL

CAN

BEL

FIN

HU

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POL

ISR

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DEUPR

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GBR

GRC

AUT

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DN

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NO

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Carbon pricing score at EUR 60 per tonne CO2

20%

AUS

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OECD EFFECTIVE CARBON RATES 2021 . 7

CARBON PRICING SCORES

These countries have a number of things in common, such as the fact that they price emissions from the road sector significantly, have moderate to high carbon prices for fossil fuel use in the residential and commercial sector, and participate in or are linked to the EU ETS, which prices emissions from electricity generation and industry. Korea follows closely with a CPS60 of 49% in 2018. Korea´s broad based emissions trading system contributes 30% to its overall carbon pricing effort, while the remaining 70% results from taxes on fuel use.

THE CARBON PRICING SCORE

1%2%

7%

9%

13%

13%

17%

24%

24%25

%28%29

%

30%

30%

30%32

%33%

34%

34%35

%

35%36

%

36%37

%

41%44

%46%

46%

47%

47%48

%

49%50

%

50%51

%53%55

%57%

57%

68%69

%

69%

100%

90%

80%

70%

60%

50%

40%

30%

20%

10%

0%

100%

90%

80%

70%

60%

50%

40%

30%

20%

10%

0%

BRA

IDN

RUS

CHN

IND

ZAF

CHL

22%

USAJP

N

TUR

COL

ARG

EST

CZE

MEXLV

A

SWE

NZL

CAN

BEL

FIN

HU

N

POL

ISR

SVK

DEUPR

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LTU

ESP

GBR

GRC

AUT

KOR

DN

K

NLDIT

A

IRL

FRA

SVNISL

NO

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LUX

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Carbon pricing score at EUR 60 per tonne CO220

%AU

S

Nearly a quarter of the analysed countries (10 out of 44) had a CPS60 of 50% or more in 2018.

Note: The table includes emissions from the combustion of biomass. Results excluding emissions from the combustion of biomass are available on OECD.STAT. Annex 3.A of Effective Carbon Rates 2018 (OECD 2018) discusses the implications of the combustion approach.

Source: Effective Carbon Rates 2021.

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8 . OECD EFFECTIVE CARBON RATES 2021

While the People’s Republic of China (China) had a CPS60 of only 9% in 2018, the introduction of a national emission trading system (ETS) in 2021 will increase its Carbon Pricing Score significantly. In a first step, China has included the electricity sector in its national ETS. Assuming that the national ETS covers 3.6 billion tonnes of carbon emissions from the electricity sector in the first step,10 at an estimated carbon price of CNY 43 or EUR 5.51 per tonne of CO2,

11 this would increase its CPS60 to 12% and its CPS30 would increase to 16%. In a second step, China plans to also include emissions from industrial facilities in its national ETS. Together with an increased expected permit price of CNY 75 (EUR 9.60) per tonne of CO2 in 2025,12 the CPS60 would then increase to 19% and the CPS30 to 30%.

Prices in the EU ETS have increased since 2018 and exceeded EUR 30 per tonne of CO2 in early 2021. With the increase of permit prices in the EU ETS to EUR 30, the CPS30 for the 23 EU countries considered in this brochure

THE CARBON PRICING SCORE

Reforms can increase the carbon pricing score increased from 58% in 2018 to 75%. In addition, the CPS60 increased from 44% in 2018 to 53%. To close the carbon pricing gap entirely – pricing all emissions at EUR 30 (or EUR 60) or more per tonne of CO2 – carbon prices would also need to increase in sectors that are currently not covered by the EU ETS and that have low effective carbon rates, such as in the residential and commercial sector and for small industrial facilities.

If the EU ETS was expanded to include all fossil fuel emissions from the residential and commercial sector as well as from industry, the CPS30 for the EU 23 would increase to 87%, assuming a permit price of EUR 30 per tonne of CO2. Under this scenario, the CPS60 for the EU 23 would increase to 63%. Additionally, if permit prices increased to at least EUR 60 per tonne CO2, the CPS60 for the EU 23 would increase to 87%. The remaining carbon pricing gap would result largely from biofuels, which often have an effective carbon rate of zero, or a substantially lower rate than those of comparable fossil fuels.

10. Zhang, X. (2020). Estimates for emission coverage of Chinese emissions trading systems.

11. Slater, H. et al. (2019). 2019 China Carbon Pricing Survey. China Carbon Forum.

12. Slater, H. ibid.

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OECD EFFECTIVE CARBON RATES 2021 . 9

CONCLUSIONS AND OUTLOOK

100%

Countries with higher carbon pricing scores are more carbon efficient. In addition, by increasing their carbon pricing scores, countries can strongly reduce emissions and move towards a greener growth path. Recent policy innovations in some countries have resulted in marked improvements in their carbon pricing scores and suggest an increase in reform momentum with the rising uptake of carbon pricing as a core element of effective climate policy packages.

Together, in 2018, the 44 OECD and G20 countries considered in Effective Carbon Rates 2021 reached a Carbon Pricing Score of 19% against the benchmark of EUR 60 per tonne of CO2. EUR 60 per tonne of CO2 is a low-end benchmark of carbon costs in 2030 and mid-range 2020 benchmark. Three countries had reached two-thirds of this goal of pricing all energy related emissions at the EUR 60 benchmark in 2018, and ten countries were more than halfway towards this goal.

Conclusion and outlook

China

China

China

EU 23

EU 23

EU 23

ETS expands to cover also residential and commercial emissions as well as emissions from small industrial facilities. Permit prices increase to EUR 30 (& EUR 60) per tonne CO

2 respectively

Permit prices increase to EUR 30 per tonne CO

2

Status quo 2018

National ETS covers 100 % of electricity sector emissions plus 60% of industrial emissions at an estimated carbon price of CNY 75 (EUR 9.60) per tonne CO

2

National ETS covers 3.3. billion tonnes CO

2 from electricity generation at an

estimated carbon price of CNY 43 (EUR 5.51) per tonne CO

2

Status quo in 2018

CPS30: 10% | CPS60: 9%

CPS30: 16% | CPS60: 12%

CPS30: 30% | CPS60: 19%

CPS30: 58% | CPS60: 44%

CPS30: 75% | CPS60: 53%

CPS30: 87% | CPS60: 63% (87%)

Figure 4: Emission trading system reform can increase the carbon pricing score

Source: Effective Carbon Rates 2021

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10 . OECD EFFECTIVE CARBON RATES 2021

Further readingOECD (2021), Effective Carbon Rates 2021: Pricing Carbon Emissions Through Taxes and Emissions Trading, OECD Publishing, Paris http://oe.cd/ECR2021

OECD (2019), Tax Revenue Implications of Decarbonising Road Transport: Scenarios for Slovenia, OECD Publishing, Paris http://oe.cd/tax-decarb-transport-slovenia

Tax Revenue Implications of Decarbonising Road TransportSCENARIOS FOR SLOVENIA

Tax Reven

ue Im

plicatio

ns o

f Decarb

on

ising R

oad

Transp

ort S

CE

NA

RIO

S FO

R S

LOV

EN

IA

OECD (2019), Taxing Energy Use 2019: Using Taxes for Climate Action, OECD Publishing, Paris http://oe.cd/TEU2019

Flues, F. and K. Van Dender (2020), “Carbon pricing design: Effectiveness, efficiency and feasibility: An investment perspective”, OECD Taxation Working Papers, No. 48, OECD Publishing, Paris http://oe.cd/il/3yP

Marten, M. and K. Van Dender (2019), “The use of revenues from carbon pricing”, OECD Taxation Working Papers, No. 43, OECD Publishing, Paris http://oe.cd/il/3yQ

Van Dender, K. (2019), “Taxing vehicles, fuels, and road use: Opportunities for improving transport tax practice”, OECD Taxation Working Papers, No. 44, OECD Publishing, Paris http://oe.cd/il/3yR

Taxing Energy Use 2019USING TAXES FOR CLIMATE ACTION

Taxing E

nerg

y Use 2019 U

SIN

G TA

XE

S FO

R C

LIM

AT

E A

CT

ION

OECD (2021), Taxing Energy Use for Sustainable Development: Opportunities for energy tax and subsidy reform in selected developing and emerging economies, OECD Publishing, Paris http://oe.cd/TEU-SD

Taxing Energy Use for Sustainable Development Opportunities for energy tax and subsidy reform in selected developing and emerging economies

OECD TAXATION WORKING PAPERS

REFERENCES

Effective Carbon Rates 2021PRICING CARBON EMISSIONS THROUGH TAXES AND EMISSIONS TRADING

Effective Carbon Rates 2021PRICING CARBON EMISSIONS THROUGH TAXES AND EMISSIONS TRADING

Carbon pricing very effectively encourages the shift of production and consumption choices towards low and zero carbon options that is required to limit climate change. Are countries using this tool to its full potential? This report measures the pricing of CO2‑emissions from energy use in 44 OECD and G20 countries, covering around 80% of world emissions. The analysis takes a comprehensive view of carbon prices, including fuel excise taxes, carbon taxes and tradable emission permit prices. The “carbon pricing score” measures how close the 44 countries, together as well as individually, are to the goal of pricing all energy related carbon emissions at current and forward‑looking benchmark values for carbon costs. The report highlights the structure of effective carbon rates across countries and sectors in 2018 and discusses change compared to 2012 and 2015. It also provides an outlook on recent trends in emissions trading in China and the European Union.

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PRINT ISBN 978-92-64-35891-1PDF ISBN 978-92-64-85463-5

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OECD EFFECTIVE CARBON RATES 2021 . 11

This work is published under the responsibility of the SecretaryGeneral of the OECD. The opinions expressed and arguments employed herein do not necessarily reflect the official views of OECD member countries or of the donor country.

This document and any map included herein are without prejudice to the status of or sovereignty over any territory,to the delimitation of international frontiers and boundaries and to the name of any territory, city or area.

The statistical data for Israel are supplied by and under the responsibility of the relevant Israeli authorities. The use of such data by the OECD is without prejudice to the status of the GolanHeights, East Jerusalem and Israeli settlements in the West Bankunder the terms of international law.

The use of this work, whether digital or print, is governed by the Terms and Conditions to be found at http://www.oecd.org/termsandconditions.

© OECD 2021

Images: © shutterstock.com

The OECD is grateful to the Kingdom of Belgium Federal Public Service, Foreign Affairs, Foreign Trade and Development Cooperation for a voluntary contribution that has supported this work.

KINGDOM OF BELGIUM

Federal Public Service

Foreign Affairs,Foreign Trade andDevelopment Cooperation

OECD EFFECTIVE CARBON RATES 2021 . 11

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12 . OECD EFFECTIVE CARBON RATES 2021

For more information:

[email protected]

http://oe.cd/ECR2021

@OECDtax


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